The thousand-foot long rock formation is considered a natural danger to sea turtles when they nest on land.

“The turtle came up and had been turned around,” Mike Renda, a biologist for The Nature Conservancy, told InsideEdition.com. “She came in a slightly different way than when she entered, causing her to flip over upside down in the rock formation.”

According to Renda, about five sea turtles are stranded on the rock formation during nesting season each year.